borane, any of a homologous series of inorganic compounds of boron and hydrogen or their derivatives.

The boron hydrides were first systematically synthesized and characterized during the period 1912 to roughly 1937 by the German chemist Alfred Stock. He called them boranes in analogy to the alkanes (saturated hydrocarbons), the hydrides of carbon (C), which is the neighbour of boron in the periodic table. Because the lighter boranes were volatile, sensitive to air and moisture, and toxic, Stock developed high-vacuum methods and apparatus for studying them. American work on boranes began in 1931, carried out by Hermann I. Schlesinger and Anton B. Burg. Boranes remained primarily of academic interest until World War II, when the U.S. government supported research to find volatile uranium compounds (borohydrides) for isotope separation, and the 1950s, when it supported programs to develop high-energy fuels for rockets and jet aircraft. (Boranes and their derivatives have much higher heats of combustion than hydrocarbon fuels.) William Nunn Lipscomb, Jr., received the 1976 Nobel Prize for Chemistry “for his studies on the structure of boranes illuminating problems of chemical bonding,” while one of Schlesinger’s students, Herbert Charles Brown, shared the 1979 prize for his hydroboration reaction (1956), the remarkably easy addition of BH3 (in the form of BH3 · S) to unsaturated organic compounds (i.e., alkenes and alkynes) in ether solvents (S) at room temperature to yield organoboranes quantitatively (that is, in a reaction that proceeds wholly, or almost wholly, to completion). The hydroboration reaction in turn opened up new avenues of research in the area of stereospecific organic synthesis.

The boranes that were prepared by Stock had the general composition BnHn + 4 and BnHn + 6, but more complex species, both neutral and negative (anionic), are known. The hydrides of boron are more numerous than those of any other element except carbon. The simplest isolable borane is B2H6, diborane(6). (The Arabic numeral in parentheses indicates the number of hydrogen atoms.) It is one of the most extensively studied and most synthetically useful chemical intermediates. It is commercially available, and for years many boranes and their derivatives were prepared from it, either directly or indirectly. Free BH3 (and B3H7) are very unstable, but they can be isolated as stable adducts (addition products) with Lewis bases (electron-donor molecules)—e.g., BH3 · N(CH3)3. Boranes may be solids, liquids, or gases; in general, their melting and boiling points increase with increasing complexity and molecular weight.

Physical properties of some common boranes

melting point (°C)

boiling point (°C)

B2H6, diborane(6)

–165

–93

B4H10, tetraborane(10)

–122

16

B5H9, pentaborane(9)

–47

60

B5H11, pentaborane(11)

–123

65

B6H10, hexaborane(10)

–62

108

B10H14, decaborane(14)

100

213

Structure and bonding of boranes

Rather than exhibiting the simple chain and ring configurations of carbon compounds, the boron atoms in the more complex boranes are located at the corners of polyhedrons, which can be considered either as deltahedrons (polyhedrons with triangular faces) or deltahedral fragments. Developing an understanding of these boron clusters has done much to help chemists rationalize the chemistry of other inorganic, organometallic, and transition-metal cluster compounds.

One of several systems of nomenclature suggested by the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC) employs characteristic structural prefixes: (1) closo- (a corruption of “clovo,” from Latin clovis, meaning “cage”), deltahedrons of n boron atoms; (2) nido- (from Latin nidus, meaning “nest”), nonclosed structures in which the Bn cluster occupies n corners of an (n + 1)-cornered polyhedron—i.e., a closo-polyhedron with one missing vertex; (3) arachno- (Greek, meaning “spider’s web”), clusters that are even more open, with boron atoms occupying n contiguous corners of an (n + 2)-cornered polyhedron—i.e., a closo-polyhedron with two missing vertices; (4) hypho- (Greek, meaning “to weave” or “a net”), the most open clusters, with boron atoms occupying n corners of an (n + 3)-cornered closo-polyhedron; and (5) klado- (Greek, meaning “branch”), n vertices of an n + 4-vertex closo-polyhedron occupied by n boron atoms. Members of the hypho- and klado- series are currently known only as borane derivatives. Linkage between two or more of these polyhedral borane clusters is indicated by the prefix conjuncto- (Latin, meaning “join together”). For example, conjuncto-B10H16 is produced by joining the B3H8 units from two B6H9 molecules via a B−B bond.

One of the reasons for the great interest in boranes is the fact that they possess structures different from any other class of compounds. Because the bonding in boranes involves multicentre bonding, in which three or more atoms share a pair of bonding electrons, boranes are commonly called electron-deficient substances. Diborane(6) has the following structure:

This structure involves three-centre bridge bonding, in which one electron pair is shared between three (rather than two) atoms—two boron atoms and one hydrogen atom. (Seechemical bonding: Advanced aspects of chemical bonding: Boranes for a discussion of the three-centre bond.) The ability of boron to form such bonds in addition to normal covalent bonds leads to the formation of complex polyhedral boranes.

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